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EU asks Mali coup leader to restore order

Foreign and domestic pressure mounts on newly installed junta to give up power and return to "constitutional order".

27 Mar 2012 21:46 GMT

About a thousand demonstrators gathered in central Bamako protesting against the military junta [AP]

The acting head of the European Union delegation in Mali has met with the leader of last week's coup to ask for areturn to constitutional order as soon as possible in the West African country.

Bertrand Soret said on Tuesday that he asked to see ministers detained by the junta. He said the coup leader promised a visit would be permitted during the day.

"I saw Captain [Amadou Haya] Sanogo this morning and told him that we expect him to find a solution to the current situation that keeps as closely as possible to the constitution," Soret said.

Soret's statement came as the military junta announced the lifting of the curfew that has been in place since it siezed power on March 22.

The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) bloc, meanwhile, has suspended Mali and says it will be sending a delegation there within 24 hours.

France, the EU and the United States have all cut off most of their aid.

ECOWAS suspension

Kadre Desire Ouedraogo, the head of the ECOWAS commission, announced on Tuesday that the body's delegation would attempt to restore democracy in Mali.

The delegation would be made up of the leaders of Ivory Coast, Benin, Burkina Faso, Niger and Liberia, the bloc said ina statement after a regional summit in the Ivorian economic capital Abidjan.

Domestic and international pressure is mounting on the newly installed junta to give up power in what was seen as one of West Africa's strongest democracies, which is also facing a Tuareg rebellion in its desert north.

"We will need today to adopt a common position without equivocation on the political and military double-crisis inMali," Alassane Ouattara, Ivory Coast president and current ECOWAS head, said before talks in the Ivorian port Abidjan.

Long-standing crisis

In an exclusive interview with Al Jazeera, army officer Amadou Sanogo, defended the coup he led, saying saying the president he deposed had failed the country.

Sanogo also blamed the toppled government for not doing enough to deal with Tuareg fighters in the north.

"What drove us to end the rule of President Amadou Touare is the long-standing crisis in the north; the armed gangs are killing people and it became very difficult for the developmental programme to succeed, which left the army in a disastrous situation," Sanogo said.

"We’ve set up a technical team to look into possible solutions for the crisis in the north. War and military confrontation is not the preferred choice, and those in the north are our brothers and they can sit with us at the negotiating table," added Sanogo.

Despite facing widespread criticism for the coup, Sanogo said he hoped the international community would accept the reasons for the takeover.

"We will send representatives to international organisations, as well as to friendly countries, to explain the goals that drove us to carry this out," Sanogo said.

Anti-coup protests

Renegade soldiers led by Sanogo had seized control of the capital Bamako and closed the country's borders on Wednesday, forcing President Touare to flee to an undisclosed location.

On Tuesday, however, the new military leadership announced the opening of the main airport to civilians.

"The Malian airspace is open only for civilian transport from today," Lieutenant Amadou Konare, a spokesman, said without giving further details.

The move came a day after about a thousand demonstrators, including members of youth movements and political parties, gathered in central Bamako to demand a return to constitutional order.

Some of the youth groups threatened to march on state TV and radio headquarters, which are under control of mutinous soldiers.

The crowd chanted "down with Sanogo" and "liberate the ORTM", referring to the public broadcaster.

Several politicians addressed the crowd, including Soumaila Cisse, who was one of the favoured candidates for the April 29 presidential elections, which are looking increasingly uncertain after the coup.

He said the military should return to protecting Mali, especially as Tuareg rebels are attacking towns in the north.

"The army is already responsible for the security of this country, here in Bamako and in the north," he said. "We demand the constitution be respected and the constitutional timing for elections be respected also."

On Monday, the UN Security Council issued a statement that "condemns the forcible takeover" of Mali by mutinous soldiers.

It called on them to "cease all violence and return to their barracks" and allow the country to go ahead with previously scheduled elections.

The World Bank and the African Development Bank all have suspended aid because of the coup, and the African Union has suspended the country's membership.